Sfarmtrcu Hills mh (&vmx (!)utatauiMim Picture a man with defi nite convictions about how a campus newspaper should be run, but whose strong belief in a student editor holds him to offering his advice only when asked. Picture a man whose knowledge of human nature enables him to extract per fection from his students by creating realistic condi tions and pressures of their field and at the same time retain their respect and lasting affection. Picture a man hardened by the realities of war and life and a man whose de votion as a husband, son and father is a model for all who know him . . . our Outstanding Professor, R. Xeale Copple. It must surely have been trying for him to watch the Daily Nebraskan struggle through each semester from bad to half-good, then begin all over again. As the adviser (now retiring he must have many times been tempted to impart to a be seiged editor the experience of one of his predecessors. Again his knowledge of stu dents and desire to see them accept completely the responsibility they under take has confined him to advising only when asked. His advice has been in valuable to us this semes ter. He has on occasion moderated our uninhibited fire into conformity with journalism ethics. He has on other occasion shown us the path of leadership when we lost our track at the crossroads of duty and compromise. His maxim is "As a journalist you don't McDONUB fttCNU 100 Pure Beef Hamburgers Tempting Cheeseburgers Old-fashioned Shakes Crisp Golden French Fries Thirst-Quenching Cote Delightful Root Be Coffee As You Like It Full-flavored Orange Drink Refreshing Cold Milk 5305 865 N. "0" 27th The Daily Nebraskan I.EE MARSHALL, manariM editor; SUSAN FUTTFR, news Htlor; BOB SAMUEL)'. sports etfitar; LVJfN 0(R ORAN. night awi etri PBISCU.LA MI'LLINS, enor stall writer: STEVE JOB PAN, KEITH SfPSOB RICH MEIER, WATNE KREC8CHER, Junior stall writers; JAMES PKARKE. sports assistant: POUT KHVNALDts CAROLE RENO. JIM KORSHOJ, nsr editors: SCOTT RVNTARSON, ARNIE PETERSON, MIKE KJJtKMAN, PETE LACK, CONNIE BASMUSSEN.. kustnes assistants: JIM DICK, subscription maaacer; LYNN RATBJEN, elrea lattoa manager! Kip Hinrabaeh. Botacnpteer. Phone 477-0711, Extensions 258S, 2M and 2SS0. Subscription rate S3 per se mester or Si per year. K Is published by University at Nebraska students under the juris diction of the Faculty Subcommittee ea Student Publications. Publica tions shall be free from censor ship by the Subcommittee or any person outside the University. Mem bers of the Nebraskan are respon sible for what they cause to be printed. 2!iII!i!!IB!!!E Dance "Fabulous took for the golden arches ! t At adtertined on KOMA Radio MAY 22 & 23-8:30 to 12 during our Grand Opening Finest Young Adult Club in Midwest SABER CLUB 1126 "P" Street Advance tickets $1.50 at the door $1.75 OPEN HOUSE 4 to 9 P.M. WKD.-TIfUIl..FRI.-.llay 1 9-20-2 1 Advance Ticket Salet 4? Memkerthip Applications want to be loved, you just want to be respected." We perhaps do Xeale an injustice by basing this tribute around our profes sional contact with him. We should n o t neglect the many top-notch writers who are today holding down im portant news positions a 1 1 over the country. They have a large measure of their success as a result of Xeale 's instruction. We should" not neglect the School of Journalism, whose reputation has been firmly enhanced through the na tional publicity given to his pioneer work in depth re porting. We should not neglect the journalism students of to day, who are learning from Xeale the sacred trust giv en to the journalist, that journalism. Is not a craft but an art, that the young journalist is bound with the duty of purifying and pre serving his field. Many people now and in the future owe a great deal to R. Xeale Copple. (!)utiitauiituri Someone once said of life 'Nice guys finish last." One need look no further than our Outstanding Student for concrete evidence of the fallacy of this statement. If one term could be se lected from the vocabulary Classified Ads WANTED Need students who 1sh to earn S.I) per boor full time during the cum mer or S?.50 per hour part-time. Working with a National Name Brand Co. Call 435-8W for appoint ment. Two or three iriris to share apartment for summer. Only three hlorks from campus. Call 435-75W. evenings. Counsellor's wanted for Girls Aeency Camp. Must be 51. Salaried. Excellent experience for women entering the ; teaching profession. Call 432-7539. Local branch of larce national companv ; expanding in the Lincoln area will hire 1 several collece students for full rime summer work. A erase $110 per week, j Higher wages wiib experience. Write j Box 1061. Lincoli, Neb. biclodine name, address, age, year in college, j and past work experience . ENTHUSIASTIC, DEPENDABLE male ; student or YMCA Boys Club Super- j visor. Good pay. Benefits. Must he j willing to work with boys. Call Bob Rhoades. 432 1251 for appointment. . . . i Ride wanted to California. San Francisco j area. Will help with driving and ex- ! Penses. Please contact Jerry Hunter, 477-5481. I Rnnmat brtirmine mid June, rmplex, 33rd and WashingKm. Call 477-7382. ! FOR RENT I Now. two bedroom apartment, ground ! level, near campns. at 1621 North t i 21st. 75 per month. 477-4444 days. j Several one-bedroom apartments avail- able: sw ana sro, very close 10 cam- pus. Call 432-7925, 466-9000. j Larfe two-bed room apartment, avail able June 15th. furnished or unfurn ished, air-conditioned, reasonable, 13tb i k C. 477-4584. j Instructor wants to sub-lease completely furnished apartment for summer. 432-2247 131 "A" Street STOLEN One University Theater Dallas trophy. Em ravin reads Linda Mead. 432-98S5 PIERCED EARRINGS From the mild to the wild. 14 to 24 et fold, silver, wood, pearls, etc., over 25 pairs. Phone 423-2005 contact Hank Ferguson. FOR SALE fi4 Comet. J-drw, 4-sneed, trophy win ner. 477-4444 days. 796-2207 evenincs. 500 C.C. Triumph Scrambler. See at 1311 South 11th. 432-2900. 19S1 Austin Healy Sprite. May be seen at tint 38th Street. Court. WS9616-434-776.. 1961 Honda "150"-Uke Phone 477-421. new Cheap. 1958 OLDS Holiday Coupe, Automatic transmission, new tires, eaD 423-1800. to the Flippers" of praise in honor of John Lonnquist, it must be "nice John's rule of campus life is that, in order to jus tify his existence in any ac tivity, he must have t h e strongest intention of leav ing it better than he found it. One need only examine his record in his house. Beta Theta Pi. the Inter fraternity Council. All Uni versity Fund and in his col lege to see how well he has followed this rule. He has not finished last no. far from it, he has finished among the first, academically, as well as with regard to the respect and affection he has drawn from his fellow students. In our three years here, we have heard John's ideas criitcized occasionally but we have never once heard that John Lonnquist had an enemy. We select our Outstanding Xebraskan on several fac tors. Xeedless to say. se lections are exceedingly dif ficult. We select a good student, a genuine person, a builder and upholder of the University. John has shown by his constant warmth and friendliness that one need not be un derhanded and cynical to rise to the top. that one must be a great person be fore he can be a great man. Men with the breadth of John's personality ap pear seldom; they are usu ally underestimated. For this reason we are particu larly proud and happy to honor John Lonnquist as our Outstanding Xebraskan. The Daily Xebraskan "racing form" last year said of John: "He doesnt' need them, thev need him." 'They" is life and the world, which would be a better place if there were more John Lonnquists. , l t - . , a-. 1 M -- Vs.... s- ( -. f -t VI- I - Our 1965-66 Mary Anderson , . Kathryn Bentzinger Barbara Bitner . . . Love Memorial Hall . . Alpha Xi Delta . . Kappa Alpha Theta . . Zeta Tau Alpha Phi Mu . Willard . . Alpha Chi Omega Audrey Braun Jan Brown . . Judy Cherry . Ruth Chestnut JoAnn Christensen . . . Grnma Carol Craig . . . Sigma Kappa Dorothy Dering ... Chi Omega Sue Dort . . . Delta Gamma Go-Getter 3futalr. Here Is my attempt to crowd a sea of feeling into eight cold inches of newspa per space: In my first editorial I mentioned "improvements which would . . . rate this semester's Daily Nebraskan among the best ever." My goodbye to the campns is the story of success and the apology for failure. My goodbye is reluctant, forced, for I would give a lot to stay here another semester. Kive years, how ever, is enough time to spend on a B.A. We produced a paper which exceeded our ex pectations. We increased the scope of our influence and the sphere of our reader ship. But we must never be satisfied. As long as stu dents have grounds for com plaint about our news cov erage, we have failed. Our boast was a gamble; some now believe it, some know it only as a boast. All students should con tinually demand more and more excellence from their paper. It is now good; it can be great if it is appreciated. I thank the campus for putting up with our mis takes. I will forever be in debted to the staff which bore with me and without whom this paper would have been nothing. Space prohibits individual recogni tion. Relaxing my grip is hard, for the Daily Nebraskan has become a person and a dear friend to me. Four hundred and fifty hours and 50.000 words are not easily forgotten. One must make the most of every minute, for by doing so he has a beauti ful past to remember and an exciting future to anticipate. FRANK PARTSCH DOWNTOWN Go-Getter Reps Jan Joy Phi Beta Bodges nnd "Guide to Fashion and Beauty" booklet, Editor's note: Due to se vere space shortages in this issue, we are unable to print two letters: one from Mark Hogg objecting to Quiz Bowl procedure and one from David Johnson and Ray mond Wilson objecting to Mr. Meyer's "personal in terpretation" of the Domini can situation. We are sorry we cannot print these letters. Open letter You are wrong. You tated that "this year's Cornhusker would never have been completed without his (Dwaine Fran cis') . . . w ork as the book's editor-in-chief." You could be farther from the truth. Dwaine worked hard and lie did a job. But I want to point out some facts concerning my dismissal as editor. At that time we had finished more pages than at a comparable time in either of the two years previous. But they met the final deadline in '64. Am I to assume that, al though we were ahead of last year's pace on Feb. 11. we would not finish as fast? I think not. Yet contrary to a statement in the paper AND GATEWAY Who arc the Go The girls who hove a sixth sense for fashion . . . start a trend without blinking on eye. What is a Go-Getter fashion? The zing of a new idea . . . sizzle of a great color ... the gusto of youth . . . and a not-a-care-in-the-wor!d freedom of fabrics made of Celanese fortel polyester or Arnel triacetate. See how the Celanese and Juniorite puts denim in a feminine mood with ruffles and checks. Con cords denim of Arnel triacetate and cotton keep it that way. Machine washable. Blue and whit check. Junior sizes 5-13. Shorts $5 Tops $6. The Place Downtown and Gateway Who is Miller's Go-Getter the top salesperson SUSAN SOMMER Big winner of $125 Gift Certificate $125 for her house, Zeta Tau Alpha AND $150 CELANESE OR FORTREL GO GETTER WARDRORE Second Place winner Shirley Stratton of Delta Zeta $50 gift certificate College opens July 31 -Look for Rohlfson Frey . . . . Kappa Kappa Gamma Alpha Gamma Delta Trudy Lieberman . Jeanette Nedrow . Wanda Paulson . . Genne Pederson . . Susan Powell . . . Kathryn Rolfsmeier . . Sigma Delta Tau . . Kappa Delta . Fedde Hall . Alpha Delta Pi Delta Delta Delta . . . Alpha Omicron Barbara Sahling . . . Burr Hall Kay Stoner . . . Alpha Phi Shirley Stratton . . . Delta Zeta Quiz Bow Dear Editor, In reply to Larry Asman's letter of Mav 19 the Quiz Bowl Committee submits the following procedure out line: 1. At every match since the beginning of competition, a committee representative recorded each Quiz B o w 1 participant's c o r r e c t an swers in the various aca demic fields, noting wheth- to Kelly Baker: on April 8. the final dead line specified in the con tract was NOT mot. When I departed w e were ahead of last year, but w hen Dwaine finished we were behind last year. But it was Dwaine who made the com pletion of the book pos sible? Are you kidding me? When I was in office we planned the cover, sold books, planned the color, chose the royalty, selected sheets and type sizes, set deadlines and many other things. Dwaine did a satisfactory job as far as I am con cerned, but he did not "make completion of t h e book possible." You are wrong. Kelly. Keith Kruger The PIZZA HUT e-x-t-e-n-d-s a thank you to oil the University students for their patronage this past year. i wishes you a zurrv SUMMER VACAT10S T H, Susan - Gcttcrs? Kathryn Bentzinger . . . Alpha XI Delta Barbara Bitner . . . Kappa Alpha Theta Judy Cherry . . . Willard JoAnn Christensen . . . Gamma Phi Beta Dorothy Dering . . . Towne Club Janet Doering ... Chi Omega Sue Dort . . . Delta Gamma Kathy Dworak . . . pj Beta Phi Kathryn Rolfsmeier . . . Alpha Omicron M Kav Sinner U. ri. Pi . . . yours for the asking in THE Answer frtss-un or bonus ques tions were answered. At the end of competition these records were compiled, points tallied and an All University team selected. In an effort to win the Big Eight competition, the All University team was select, ed whollv on the bases of the individual's point tabula tion and the desire to choose the best possible team-those strong in one field but able to provide good support in one or two other fields. 2. Six, not three, mem bers of the Quiz Bowl Com mittee compiled and tallied the records. 3. Mark Hogg is not a member of the Quiz Bowl Committee and was not in volved in the selection. 4. Greg Kropp and Larry Anderson are members of the All-University team. Larrv Johnson, Chairman NU Quiz Bowl Committee ijeaag uwq s.J! "x jo 1 'dAQpOOS gulA'BS jo A'E.W. .:ui s.ji aiSu u.wop sptsdn Suiop S! uiunioa sun jetT- J,1S.mOA gU15(SB dipoA MOU jbui arngBtux prno.w i dbjowoj ira.ii A"q SJemoD Sommer n,jjMU rn, PLACE A -5 '"WSTlj f v . f